Somewhere Over The Rainbow : Travels in South Africa Paperback / softback

Description

Near the southern tip of Africa, there is a mountain that does a conjuring trick with the biggest tablecloth on earth.

In a sacred forest near the Limpopo river, there is a bird that flies on wings of thunder, flashing lightning from its eyes and bearing rain in its beak.

In between, there is a hauntingly beautiful land and millions of confused people.

When Archbishop Desmond Tutu dubbed his native South Africa the 'Rainbow Nation', he conjured a vision of ethnic diversity and harmony in a country with eleven official languages, two national anthems, and a parliament that shuttled between two cities.

As a foreign correspondent reporting on the last days of apartheid, Gavin Bell thought it was a brave image and wondered how long it would endure.

A few years later, he returned to find out what had happened to Tutu's rainbow.

In his travels he found a country at odds with itself, swinging between hope and despair, buoyed by a sense of freedom and haunted by a fear of violent crime.

SOMEWHERE OVER THE RAINBOW is not only a fine travel book by an award-winning writer, it is a compelling portrait of a country in search of an identity.